Monday, November 14, 2022

Joe Locke - Wire Walker

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:58
Size: 135,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:46) 1. A New Blue
( 4:57) 2. May You Shine
( 8:33) 3. Barbara
( 5:53) 4. Six Years Remembrance
( 9:49) 5. Stand Inside the Circle
(10:20) 6. A Time for Love
( 4:31) 7. Young and Foolish
( 8:06) 8. Wire Walker

Vibraphonist Joe Locke's career seemed to take off during his time working with Steeplechase, not only because of his formidable playing but his ability to vary his accompanists and the mix of music from one session to the next. This 1992 date features a rhythm section of Dave Kikoski, Ed Howard, and Marvin "Smitty" Smith, as well as saxophonist Danny Walsh.

The group is clearly fired up on the opener, Jimmy Heath's "A New Blue," and easily maintain their momentum throughout the rest of the date. The lush treatment of Johnny Mandel's "A Time for Love" and his revival of the overlooked ballad "Young and Foolish" (inspired somewhat by pianist Bill Evans' trio arrangement) are also outstanding tracks. Locke contributed three originals; the very demanding post-bop "Wire Walker" proves that Locke's quintet can meet almost any musical challenge. Highly recommended. By Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/wire-walker-mw0000436639

Personnel: Vibraphone – Joe Locke; Bass – Ed Howard; Drums – Marvin "Smitty" Smith; Piano – Dave Kikoski; Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone – Danny Walsh

Wire Walker

David Lahm - Jazz Takes on Joni Mitchell

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:02
Size: 143,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:03) 1. Solid Love
(6:44) 2. Song for Sharon
(6:14) 3. Edith and the Kingpin
(5:56) 4. Coyote

(7:19) 5. Blue Motel Room
(7:32) 6. The Blonde in the Bleachers and the Vamp from Hell
(5:23) 7. The Fiddle and the Drum
(6:57) 8. Solid Love (alternate version)
(8:50) 9. Shadows and Light

I somehow forgot just how intertwined pop star Joni Mitchell’s music has been with jazz. Maybe its because my sister bought the new Joni Mitchel records, and I only listened to them from the bedroom across the hall, that I didn’t memorize her album covers. But looking back on Mitchell’s work, up pops Bud Shank, Larry Carlton, and Jaco Pastorious. Her Mingus record was more a love offering than a musical statement.

Now, twenty-years later she’s back, singing on Herbie Hancock’s Gershwin tribute, and is paid homage to on trumpeter Dave Douglas’ Moving Portraits (DIW/Japan). Add to that, this tribute from producer/pianist David Lahm. The musicians include saxophonists Lew Tabakin and Thomas Chapin, trumpeter Randy Brecker, violinist Mark Feldman, and drummer Kenny Washington. Lahm effortlessly moves from a Kansas City styled opener “Solid Love” to a Jaco Pastorious tribute “Coyote.”

Chapin, a saxophonist we lost last year to cancer is haunting but so is Lew Tabakin. Wow, his straight-ahead jazz is so very expressive. On “Blue Motel Room,” he compliments organist Mike LeDonne and William Galison’s harmonica to slide the blues into your back pocket. Lahm reveals Joni Mitchell as a true jazzbo, something that could have wrecked her career so many years ago. By Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jazz-takes-on-joni-mitchell-david-lahm-arkadia-jazz-review-by-mark-corroto

Personnel: David Lahm: Piano; Randy Brecker: Trumpet; Lew Tabackin: Tenor sax; Thomas Chapin: Alto sax/flute; Mark Feldman: Violin; Friedman: Vibraphone; William Galison: Harmonica; Roger Rosenberg: Sax/clarinet; Ron Vincent: Drums; Peter Herbert: Bass; Ed Naumeister: Trombone; Mike LeDonne: Organ; Kenny Washington: Drums; Peter Washington: Bass

Jazz Takes on Joni Mitchell

Barry Harris Trio - Magnificent!

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:23
Size: 91,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:42)  1. Bean And The Boys
(4:04)  2. You Sweet And Fancy Lady
(4:17)  3. Rouge
(4:01)  4. Ah-Leu-Cha
(6:05)  5. Just Open Your Heart
(4:22)  6. Sun Dance
(5:20)  7. These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)
(4:28)  8. Dexterity

By the time pianist Barry Harris recorded his first session as a leader in 1958, Breakin' It Up for the Argo label, Charlie Parker had already been dead for three years and the be-bop movement that he had helped usher in was already giving way to the more visceral advance of hard bop and the beginning strains of Ornette Coleman's "new thing" approach. For Harris, who was a died-in-the-wool be-bopper, this meant coming on the scene a bit too late to be part of the music that had inspired his own jazz quest. Subsequently, while Harris' love of the be-bop language in no way makes him a one-trick pony, his style has somewhat limited his range of expression over the years. Coming off a string of Riverside releases that tended to possess a nagging feeling of sameness, Harris was to fare much better with his series of Prestige recordings. He added horns for his first two efforts, Luminescence and Bull's Eye, a move that seemed to broaden his musical palette. Then in 1969 at the end of his tenure with the label, Harris would return to the trio format, but with a more mature outlook. 

While the hyperbole involved in the album's title may border a bit on overstatement, the newly-reissued Magnificent easily ranks among Harris's better and most realized trio dates.There's much that is attractive about this set because even among the expected bop tunes like "Dexterity" and "Ah-Leu-Cha," we get such notable Harris originals as "You Sweet and Fancy Lady" (one of his best-known pieces), "Just Open Your Heart," and the Latin-tinged "Sun Dance." Ron Carter and drummer Leroy Williams form a well-oiled team with ample support and choice solo spots of their own. Although Harris continues to be a strong and committed performer, his Prestige period still holds special treasures of which Magnificent happily belongs. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/magnificent-barry-harris-prestige-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php

Personnel: Barry Harris- piano; Ron Carter- double bass; Leroy Williams- drums.

Magnificent!

Gonzalo Rubalcaba - Turning Point / Trio D'ete

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:07
Size: 101,5 MB
Art: Front

( 6:36) 1. Infantil
(10:07) 2. Otra Mirada
( 2:10) 3. Turning I
( 7:34) 4. Iku
( 3:15) 5. Turning II
( 8:04) 6. Hard One
( 6:18) 7. Joy,Joie

Turning Point is the new album by GRAMMY-Award winning pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba. Turning Point introduces a new trio, Trio D’été, which features stalwart bassist Matt Brewer and star drummer Eric Harland. The second in a planned trilogy of trio recordings, this new release follows in the footsteps of Rubalcaba’s Skyline, which won the GRAMMY award last year for Best Jazz Instrumental Album.

During his 35 years as a recording artist, Gonzalo Rubalcaba has been averse to repeating himself from one album to the next, adhering to a tenet once summarized by Wayne Shorter as “everything that’s happened is a work in progress,” or, as Duke Ellington suavely put it, “my favorite recording is the next one.” Along those lines, in recent years – as on Skyline with Ron Carter and Jack DeJohnette, Rubalcaba has retrospected on earlier experiences, reconsidering the raw materials and approaching them with an attitude of speculative creativity.

Those imperatives guided Rubalcaba in 2018 as he conceived Turning Point, recorded in Miami a month after Skyline. Like Skyline, Turning Point demonstrates Rubalcaba’s protean approach to the piano trio, a configuration he’s investigated before the public gaze since his 1990s Blue Note recordings with Carter, DeJohnette, Charlie Haden, John Patitucci, Jeff Chambers, Paul Motian and Ignacio Berroa.

Although Rubalcaba has deep roots with both musicians, the Rubalcaba-Brewer-Harland configuration was a new one circa 2018. Turning Point is Brewer’s fifth recording with Rubalcaba since 2007, when he played on Avatar, a quintet session with alto saxophonist Yosvany Terry, trumpeter Michael Rodriguez and drummer Marcus Gilmore on which Rubalcaba premiered “Infantil,” a reimagined version of which opens this album. He’s subsequently performed on 5Passion productions XXI Century, which featured the Rubalcaba’s trio with Brewer and Marcus Gilmore; Suite Caminos, an ancient-to-future evocation of Afro-Yoruba ceremonial; and Charlie, Rubalcaba’s bolero-centric homage to Haden.

Rubalcaba’s maiden voyage with Harland also occurred in 2007, when they joined Chris Potter and Dave Holland in a “Monterey All Stars” unit that toured the U.S. during that summer and recorded one album. Explaining his thinking about their second encounter, Rubalcaba says: “I wanted to do a trio record of original music, based in the language of jazz, not completely straight ahead, but bringing in other elements that are part of my musical memory and my personality as a musician. I thought that Eric could help me rhythmically his background is not only straight ahead, but also from R&B he plays drums in a very modern way, which is what I was looking for.

While Skyline was a collaborative effort featuring compositions from Rubalcaba, Carter and DeJohnette, on Turning Point, Rubalcaba takes on a more pivotal role as both composer and producer. “Of course, I put my faith in Eric and Matt, and I wanted them to make that music like this is their music, too. They’re both serious about being up to date and informed about everything happening at the moment, not only here, but different points around the world. They have American music, of course, but also music from India, from Brazil, from Africa, from musicians I don’t know. This is healthy, because you can tell them, ‘this is my idea, and I’d like to have that sound and go in that direction,’ and their level of reference allows them to connect quickly with that idea.”

As an example, Rubalcaba cites his tour de force treatment of the aforementioned “Infantil,” dedicated to guitar legend John McLaughlin, who, he says, “has always had the feeling of someone who has remained fresh and active and curious over so many decades, keeping the attitude of a young rebel.” The structure contains on-a-dime metric modulations from funk to Latin to straight-ahead.

Another highlight is “Otra Mirada (Another Look)” an original bolero that debuted on Supernova (Blue Note), released the same year as Nocturne, for which Rubalcaba convened Nuyorican bass master Carlos Henriquez, then 20, and Cuban drum titan Ignacio Berroa. For Trio D’été, Rubalcaba presents a completely reharmonized treatment, also including different harmonic progressions in the solo section.

“Bolero was everywhere at my house and with my family in Havana,” Rubalcaba says. “For a long time I’ve presented my relationship with the bolero while changing as much as I can harmonically and rhythmically to look in another way at what bolero is or has been until today. As a style, I think of the bolero as a very European music with a very Latin rhythm section. The melody can be made by an Italian composer from the 18th or 19th century, and harmonies are coming sometimes from jazz music or American music, or even European music in its most classical way. Then the bongos, congas and maracas are behind, changing the rhythmic colors. On ‘Otra Mirada’ if we eliminate the drums and leave only bass and piano, it could easily be chamber music. The drums transform it, take the music in another direction.”

Brewer’s precise, deliberate, resonant tumbao introduces “Ikú” (the Yoruba term for “death” or “la muerte”), whose stately, bittersweet melody Rubalcaba extracted from a chant he’d heard in childhood at funeral ceremonies. Harland sound-paints throughout on mallets. “It appears always in a sad mood when you’ve lost someone or are remembering someone who passed away,” Rubalcaba says of the piece. “At the same time, the melody of the line and the spirit of that music sounds beautiful to me. Everything is in there the darkness or the bright side, the sweetness and beauty or the sad and nostalgic part. How you appreciate the music depends on the day, the moment you’re living.”

Portions of “The Hard One” sound like two drummers having a conversation. Rubalcaba first recorded it on the 1998 album Inner Voyage, when tenor titan Michael Brecker joined his Jeff Chambers-Ignacio Berroa trio; two years later he revisited it with Henriquez and Berroa on Supernova. In the booklet notes for Inner Voyage Rubalcaba wrote that Chambers kept referring to the piece as “the hard one” during rehearsals for a Japanese tour that preceded the album, and “we decided that the name was appropriate.” He added: “…it’s connected to some of Chick Corea’s work during the early ’80s; I also connect it with the language developed by composers like Berg, Bartok, Stravinsky and Schoenberg.”

He concludes the proceedings with the brisk, playful, interactive, self-descriptively titled “Joy, Joie,” Rubalcaba’s only composition written specifically for Trio d’été. He describes it as an ode to “a spirit that cannot be dark and cannot be down, that’s bright, filled with light. It’s probably the least formally complex piece on the record two sections, like typical standards in American music, AABA, and then solos, and then the coda. That’s it.”

Winding down our conversation, Rubalcaba revealed what his fan base can expect for volume three of this three-part extravaganza intended to showcase “three different trios, different projections, different language, different sounds and different ways to approach the music.” It will be an album of “Latin fusion” featuring “players from Latin culture not only Cuba.” “My plan is to bring new original compositions for this album, not music I’d already done and want to recompose,” Rubalcaba says. “That will be the challenge.”https://lydialiebman.com/index.php/project/gonzalo-rubalcaba/

Personnel: Gonzalo Rubalcaba (Piano); Matt Brewer (Bass) and Eric Harland (Drums)

Turning Point / Trio D'ete

Sunday, November 13, 2022

Nathaniel Cross - The Description Is Not The Described

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 27:21
Size: 62,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:13) 1. Goodbye For Now
(4:30) 2. Charge It To The Game
(8:23) 3. Light In The Darkness
(7:14) 4. Who Looks Inside, Awakes

Trombonist Nathaniel Cross is a key presence on London's alternative jazz scene, just like his brother, Theon Cross, who plays tuba in Shabaka Hutchings' Sons of Kemet. Until now, however, Nathaniel has probably been better known among his fellow musicians than with the general public, for he has been most active behind the scenes as a session musician and arranger. Among other major names Cross has worked with are his longtime friend, drummer and producer Moses Boyd, on whose Mercury Prize nominated Dark Matter (Exodus, 2020) Cross played and arranged four of the ten tracks, singers Zara McFarlane and Macy Gray, and grime stars Stormzy and Kano.

The Description Is Not The Described should raise Cross' public profile considerably. A four-track EP coming in at around thirty minutes, it is packed with positive, uplifting jazz which in trademark London style augments its jazz foundation with elements of other musics, including calypso, Afro-Cuban, hip hop and broken beat. As well as Cross, the core band features two other cracking horn players, trumpeter Dylan Jones of Ezra Collective and tenor saxophonist Richie Garrison, another ranking session musician, whose credits include pianist Robert Glasper, trumpeter Roy Hargrove and saxophonist Soweto Kinch. Simon Mitchell is on keyboards and the drummer is Saleem Raman, a regular member of the house band at Ronnie Scott's.

The EP title is inspired by one of philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti's maxims. Cross chose it because he feels it reflects the state of the world in 2021. "So many of us are caught up in labels and descriptions that we end up looking at people for what they are, rather than embrace them for who they are," he says. "No matter how detailed the description is, it will never capture the essence."

Opening track "Goodbye For Now" is dedicated to Cross' late father, who passed in March 2020 at a tragically young age. Its opening bars make touching references to the signature ostinatos of John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme" and Pharoah Sanders' "The Creator Has A Master Plan." The track includes a short extract from a tape-recorded conversation between Cross, when he was a toddler, and his father, from a cassette which Cross found when he was sorting out his father's belongings after he passed. You can hear the love in both voices. The positive vibe is maintained in brief solos traded by Cross, Garrison and Jones (three from each of them). "Charge It To The Game" and "Light In The Darkness" are similarly vibrant, with more fine solos. The tempo, but not the heat, decreases a little on the closer, "Who Looks Inside, Awakes," a maxim coined by the psychoanalyst Carl Jung. Always good advice, it is newly appropriate in this age of social media, suggesting one looks for validation inside oneself rather than in the number of likes generated by tweets and instagrams. The Description Is Not The Described is a stonking debut, all the more welcome for being overdue.By Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-description-is-not-the-described-nathaniel-cross-first-word-records

Personnel: Nathaniel Cross: trombone; Dylan Jones: trumpet; Richie Garrison: saxophone, tenor; Saleem Raman: drums; Simon Mitchell: keyboards.

The Description Is Not The Described

Barry Harris - For The Moment

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 77:34
Size: 177.6 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1984/2000
Art: Front

[5:56] 1. I Love Lucy
[6:00] 2. My Heart Stood Still
[4:43] 3. Bean And The Boys
[5:50] 4. To Monk With Love
[2:55] 5. For The Moment
[7:09] 6. Chico The Man
[8:31] 7. Reflections Light Blue Well You Needn't Rhythm-A-Ning
[7:35] 8. Shaw Nuff
[5:02] 9. 7-9-3-4-0
[6:15] 10. Save Some For Later
[6:21] 11. Looking Glass
[5:03] 12. To Monk Wih Love
[6:09] 13. One More Blues

Throughout his career, pianist Barry Harris has kept the spirit of bebop and the music of Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk alive in his joyous and creative playing. For this live concert, Harris is heard in a trio with bassist Rufus Reid and drummer Leroy Williams. There is a four-song Thelonious Monk medley, five originals (including "To Monk With Love" and "For the Moment," which Harris played at Thelonious' funeral), "My Heart Stood Still," and a boppish version of the "I Love Lucy Theme." A delightful and enthusiastic set. ~Scott Yanow

For The Moment

Sheila Jordan - Better Than Anything: Live (Feat. Harvie S & Alan Broadbent)

Size: 150,1 MB
Time: 65:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Better Than Anything (Live) (6:37)
02. If I Had You (Live) (9:15)
03. The Best Thing For You (Live) (5:54)
04. I Concentrate On You (Live) (3:59)
05. Medley: You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To/Mourning Song/Japanese Dream/What'll I Do (Live) (13:55)
06. Confirmation (Live) (5:53)
07. Waltz For Debby (Live) (4:24)
08. Falling In Love With Love (Live) (8:38)
09. The Caterpillar Song (Live) (6:27)

One of the most consistently creative of all jazz singers, Sheila Jordan has a relatively small voice, but has done the maximum with her instrument. She is one of the few vocalists who can improvise logical lyrics (which often rhyme), she is a superb scat singer, and is also an emotional interpreter of ballads. Yet despite her talents, Jordan spent much of the 1960s and '70s working at a conventional day job. She studied piano when she was 11 and early on, sang vocalese in a vocal group. Jordan moved to New York in the 1950s, was married to Duke Jordan (1952-62), studied with Lennie Tristano, and worked in New York clubs. George Russell used her on an unusual recording of "You Are My Sunshine" and she became one of the few singers to lead her own Blue Note album (1962). However, it would be a decade before she appeared on records again, working with Carla Bley, Roswell Rudd, and co-leading a group with Steve Kuhn in the late '70s. Jordan recorded a memorable duet album with bassist Arild Andersen for SteepleChase in 1977, and has since teamed up with bassist Harvie Swartz on many occasions. By the 1980s, Sheila Jordan was finally performing jazz on a full-time basis and gaining the recognition she deserved 20 years earlier. She recorded as a leader (in addition to the Blue Note session) for East Wind, Grapevine, SteepleChase, Palo Alto, Blackhawk, and Muse, resurfacing in 1999 with Jazz Child. ~ Scott Yanow

Better Than Anything

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Rosemary Clooney With the L.A. Jazz Choir - Sings Rodgers, Hart & Hammerstein

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:24
Size: 118,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:15) 1. Oh, What A Beautiful Morning
(4:55) 2. People Will Say We're In Love
(3:47) 3. Love, Look Away
(6:07) 4. The Gentleman Is A Dope
(2:54) 5. It Might As Well Be Spring
(6:22) 6. The Sweetest Sounds
(3:10) 7. I Could Write A Book
(3:59) 8. You Took Advantage Of Me
(5:58) 9. The Lady Is A Tramp
(4:34) 10. Little Girl Blue
(4:01) 11. My Romance
(3:15) 12. Yours Sincerely

This Rosemary Clooney recording differs from all of her previous Concord albums in that she is joined by the L.A. Jazz Choir (a 12-voice group) on half of the dozen selections. The choral backing is a bit of an acquired taste for jazz listeners but Clooney's backup sextet does consist of tenor saxophonist Scott Hamilton, trumpeter Jack Sheldon (who helps out Clooney with his vocal on "People Will Say We're in Love"), trombonist Chauncey Welsch, pianist John Oddo (who is responsible for both the choral and instrumental arrangements), bassist John Clayton and drummer Joe LaBarbera.

Clooney interprets the music of Richard Rodgers and lyrics which are split almost evenly between Lorenz Hart and Oscar Hammerstein. Most of the tunes are fairly well-known (including "It Might as Well Be Spring," "I Could Write a Book," "You Took Advantage of Me" and "My Romance") but Rosemary Clooney makes them sound fresh and alive.By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/sings-rodgers-hart-hammerstein-mw0000207686

Personnel: Rosemary Clooney – vocals; Jack Sheldon – trumpet, vocal (track 2); Chauncey Welsch – trombone; Warren Vaché Jr. – cornet; Scott Hamilton – tenor saxophone; John Oddo – piano, vocal and instrumental arrangements; John Clayton – bass; Joe LaBarbera – drums; The L.A. Jazz Choir – vocals (tracks 1,3,7,10-12)

Sings Rodgers, Hart & Hammerstein

Lew Tabackin With The Netherlands Metropole Orchestra - Pyramid

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1999
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 56:04
Size: 103,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:57)  1. Battle Royal
(5:04)  2. Isfahan
(6:04)  3. Speak Low
(6:28)  4. Broken Dreams
(3:55)  5. Night And Day
(6:58)  6. Yesterdays
(6:12)  7. Are You Real?
(6:03)  8. Pyramid
(6:07)  9. All Too Soon
(5:12) 10. Sweet And Lovely

Lew Tabackin's guest appearance with the Netherlands Metropole Orchestra is one of the most enjoyable in their series of collaborations with jazz soloists. Tabackin is a swinging tenor saxophonist and a top notch flute player as well, playing both on the exciting opener by Duke Ellington, "Battle Royal" and showcasing his lyrical flute on "Speak Low." In addition to his outstanding playing throughout the CD, he composed the haunting bittersweet ballad "Broken Dreams." Most of the arrangements by conductor Rob Pronk complement Tabackin's playing without overwhelming him with excessive strings. This is a very wellcrafted release worth purchasing. ~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/pyramid-mw0000667776

Personnel: Peter Tiehuis, Lex Bolderdijk (guitar); Joke Schonewille, Rosetty de Ruiter-Verwoerdt (harp); Herman Van Haaren, Arlia de Ruiter, Erica Korthals Altes, Denise Ruyters, Lucia Domski, Rudolf Vobornik, Dennis Koenders, Marianne Heuvel, Elisabeth Cats, Pauline Terlow, Wim Kok, Rami Koch, Marijn Rombout, Moortje Koch, Ernö Olah (violin); Anne-Mariue V.D. Bogaard, Mieke Honingh, Aimee Versloot, Michael Klier, Julia Jowett (viola); Hans Bonsel, Wim Grin, Olaf Groesz, Bastiaan Van Der Werf (cello); Friederike Darius, Janine Abbas, Mariel Bos (flute); Martin De Ruiter, Willem Luijt (oboe); Leo Van Oostrom, Marc Scholten, Leo Janssen, Max Boeree, Dick Vennik (saxophone); Jan Hollander, Jan Ppsthof, Henk Heijink, Ruud Breuls (trumpet); Wim Timmermans, Roel Koster (French horn); Paul Woesthuis, Jan Elsink, Bart Van Lier (trombone); Martin V.D. Berg (bass trombone); Cor Bakker, Hans Vroomans (piano, synthesizer); Eric Winkelmann, Arend Liefkes (double bass); Herman Rieken, Arno van Nieuwenhuize, Eddy Koopman, Cees Kranenburg, Mike Schäperclaus (drums, percussion).

Pyramid

Millenium Trio - Millenium Trio (feat. Yannick Robert, Franck Agulhon, Benoit Vanderstraeten)

Styles: Guitar, Post Bop
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:49
Size: 105,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:06) 1. Baïkal
(0:31) 2. Remember
(5:51) 3. Asakusa
(4:04) 4. Millenium
(6:44) 5. Le train matcha
(4:59) 6. Thank You Mr. Mac Low
(4:53) 7. Je me suis fait tout petit
(5:21) 8. Can't Help Falling in Love
(4:29) 9. Bopping in Tokyo
(0:44) 10. Siberian Trip
(3:01) 11. Shinkansen

But who hides under this name of Millenium Trio which one could believe linked to literature or cinema…?Millenium Trio is in fact the meeting of three remarkable musicians: guitarist Yannick Robert, drummer Franck Agulhon and bassist Benoit Vanderstraeten. Once you have been told this, you immediately understand that musical poetry will be there, which is indeed the case on this album, recorded visibly in the style of a "live", which gives a most pleasing result.

I have always known Yannick Robert as being a discreet guitarist, never looking for great effects, but with the right note and poetic writing, working like an artisan who calls his work into question 1,000 times, to keep only the best. And “Millenium”, more than his other albums, is the culmination of a journey that began with his “Soul Cages Trio” (*). On this opus, Yannick Robert and his two accomplices work wonders. It's a real pleasure to listen to this album, as always with Yannick Robert. It's an album that speaks to our feelings and is for everyone!

We are of course waiting with great impatience to discover this trio on stage, but in the meantime, “Millenium” is our great “Coup de coeur” which will be available on May 4, 2018. An album which appears on the Alien Beats Records label and which will be distributed by Incredible.And icing on the cake, a concert for the release of this album is scheduled for June 28 at Sunset, in Paris! Remember to book your seats! Translate By Google https://www.paris-move.com/reviews/millenium-trio-millenium/

Personnel: Yannick Robert (g), Benoit Vanderstraeten (b) , Franck Agulhon (dm)

Millenium Trio (feat. Yannick Robert, Franck Agulhon, Benoit Vanderstraeten)

Albare & Co - Freedom

Styles: Guitar, Big Band
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:16
Size: 129,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:37) 1. Freedom
(4:58) 2. Adeus
(5:56) 3. La Fiesta
(5:30) 4. Lost Compass
(4:06) 5. Love is Always
(6:51) 6. Randy Makes Me Smile
(4:56) 7. Shimmozle
(5:11) 8. Sketches
(6:13) 9. Sunny Samba
(5:54) 10. New Expectations

"Jazz is the voice of freedom," says Israeli-born guitarist & composer Albare, "and it will never be silenced." To that end, Albare has assembled a world-class sextet to perform seven of his sunny, swing-based compositions, two others co-written with pianist Phil Turcio and Turcio's graceful "Shimmozle."

The session begins, appropriately enough, with Albare's open-hearted "Freedom," which introduces fellow front-liner Randy Brecker on trumpet. Soprano saxophonist Ada Rovatti (who also plays splendid alto and tenor saxophones) makes her first appearance on "La Fiesta," a rhythmic bossa nova not to be confused with Chick Corea's composition of that same name. This one was written by Albare, as were "Freedom" and "Adues" (or "Adeus," as it is spelled both ways), which precede it. The lively "Lost Compass," co-authored by Albare and Turcio, is next, followed by the easygoing "Randy Makes Me Smile" (with Brecker's mellow flugelhorn counterbalancing a robust tenor saxophone solo by Rovatti) and "Shimmozle."

Albare plays guitar in the manner of some of his main influences, Django Reinhardt, Wes Montgomery and Antonio Carlos Jobim, combining old-world swing with more modern phrasings. It works well, especially when complemented by Brecker and Rovatti's expressly contemporary stance. As for the rhythm section (Turcio, bassist Phil Rex, drummer Felix Bloxom), it is diligent and flexible, tending to business while giving the front line ample room to breathe.

"Sketches" is another meditative number, leading to the buoyant "Sunny Samba" and free-wheeling finale, "New Expectations" (sans Brecker and Rovatti). Freedom isn't a classic session but a very good one with no letdown in quality from start to finish.
By Jack Bowers https://www.allaboutjazz.com/freedom-albare-and-co-self-produced

Personnel: Albare: band/orchestra; Randy Brecker: trumpet; Ada Rovatti: saxophone; Phil Turcio: keyboards; Phil Rex: bass; Felix Bloxom: drums.

Freedom

Friday, November 11, 2022

Julian Lage - Squint

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:37
Size: 104,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:27) 1. Etude
(3:25) 2. Boo's Blues
(4:30) 3. Squint
(4:35) 4. Saint Rose
(5:28) 5. Emily
(3:59) 6. Familiar Flower
(3:15) 7. Day and Age
(6:53) 8. Quiet Like a Fuse
(3:31) 9. Short Form
(4:18) 10. Twilight Surfer
(3:12) 11. Call of the Canyon

Before discussing guitarist Julian Lage's album, some food for thought... A credible argument could be put forward to say that the jazz piano trio reached its pinnacle of perfection with Bill Evans' Village Vanguard performances of June 1961, with the trio of bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian, and that trios led by guitars, another chordal instrument, have long since replaced piano led trios at the evolutionary edge of the music.

Still thinking aloud, as it were, the acoustic piano might also be said to be increasingly anachronistic across jazz, its place taken in many young bands by an electric keyboard, or a guitar, or by no chordal instrument at all. On the other hand, the explanation for that could simply be cyclical. In any event, no denigration of acoustic pianists is intended. It is indisputable, however, that jazz guitar trios continue to push the boundaries of the music or, as in the case of Lage's Blue Note debut, Squint, bring a fresh spin to the lyric territory in which Bill Evans excelled.

All but two of the eleven tracks on Squint are Lage originals and they range from blues rock to exquisitely beautiful ballads. Predictably, Blue Note is pushing the first strand, which, enjoyable as it is, forms the smaller proportion of the album. The only YouTube clip available at the time of writing is "Boo's Blues," and the album's first single is "Saint Rose." Both tunes are radio-friendly drive-time chuggers. Among the ballads, a highlight is undoubtedly the cover of Johnny Mandel's "Emily," but Lage's "Day And Age" and "Quiet Like A Flower" are every bit as gorgeous. The guitarist's playing on all three tracks is as harmonically elevated as Bill Evans was on, say, "My Foolish Heart" and "Waltz For Debby" at the Vanguard (or indeed on the versions of "My Funny Valentine" and "Romain" he recorded in a duo with guitarist Jim Hall in 1962 for the United Artists album Undercurrent).

Lage excels throughout Squint as both an improviser and a composer, and he is well served by bassist Jorge Roeder and drummer Dave King, both of whom had toured with him for two years before the pandemic delayed the completion of recording. From every angle, and from start to finish, the album is a delight. By Chris May
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/squint-julian-lage-blue-note-records

Personnel: Julian Lage: guitar, electric; Jorge Roeder: bass, acoustic; Dave King: drums.

Squint

Lew Tabackin Quartet - Desert Lady

Styles: Flute And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:02
Size: 149,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:09)  1. Hot House
(9:40)  2. Pyramid
(8:04)  3. Serenade To Sweden
(7:19)  4. Chelsea Bridge
(3:57)  5. Johnny Come Lately
(9:55)  6. Desert Lady
(4:37)  7. A Bit Byas'd
(2:53)  8. You'll Never Know
(5:27)  9. Yesterdays
(7:57) 10. You Leave Me Breathless

The great tenor saxophonist and flutist Lew Tabackin is joined by pianist Hank Jones, bassist Dave Holland, and drummer Victor Lewis on this well-rounded program. The Concord CD has many highlights, including "Hot House," Duke Ellington's "Serenade to Sweden," Tabackin's "A Bit Byas'd," and "You Leave Me Breathless"; the leader's tenor in particular is in top form. Highly recommended to fans of straight-ahead jazz, this release gives one a strong sampling of Lew Tabackin's talents. ~  Scott Yanow  https://www.allmusic.com/album/desert-lady-mw0000208060

Personnel:  Flute, Tenor Saxophone – Lew Tabackin;  Piano – Hank Jones ;  Bass – Dave Holland;  Drums – Victor Lewis

Desert Lady

Judy Niemack - What's Love?

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:47
Size: 144,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:25) 1. Feelin’ It In Your Bones
(5:06) 2. Firefly
(4:17) 3. For All We Know
(4:25) 4. Catalyst
(5:01) 5. I’m Moving On
(5:35) 6. What’s Love Got to Do With It
(4:46) 7. Just When I Thought
(4:39) 8. With You
(5:07) 9. Let Life Lead You
(4:27) 10. Blues That Soothe My Soul
(4:34) 11. I’ll Love Again
(4:38) 12. Born to Be Blue
(4:40) 13. Right Here, Right Now

Jazz vocalist Judy Niemack presents a collection of rhapsodic romantic songs on her upcoming album release, What’s Love, due out October 28 on Sunnyside Records. Following Niemack’s lauded 2018 release New York Stories with pianist Jim McNeely and Danish Radio Big Band, What’s Love represents a vulnerable side of the lifelong vocalist’s artistry. In an embrace of her distinctive sound, Niemack’s rich collection of original lyrics paired with select standards offers a glimpse into her resilient and inventive vocal prowess.

An exploration of the healing powers of love, What’s Love presents as a musical reconciliation with the boundless, yet relatable, challenges that continually loop through our lives. While conceptually, What’s Love is a beacon of effervescence, its sound is both capricious and exhilarating. Niemack takes to exploring the many varieties of love in her life on each selection, while also seizing an opportunity to explore her vocal range. Her trademark sound clear, yet warm with a cloudy edge is softer here. Employing this lower timbre, Niemack is keenly aware of her newfound sense of expression: “I haven’t lost my high notes, but gained lower ones,” she adds.

Niemack is joined among the highest level of jazz musicianship for the affair; What’s Love hosts Peter Bernstein on guitar, Sullivan Fortner on piano, Doug Weiss on bass, Joe Farnsworth on drums and Eric Alexander on alto saxophone.

“This is my view of love which, of course, is unique,” the singer, author and professor shares while discussing her inspiration for the title, which also borrows from her arrangement of the Tina Turner hit, “What’s Love Got To Do With It, a high moment on the date for the leader, who takes a slower and more contemplative approach to Turner’s question.

“Michelangelo famously said that he saw the sculpture hidden in a piece of marble and simply revealed it by taking away the stone, bit by bit. Composing for me is similar I have a feeling I want to express, which leads to a poem, words, which then are set to music that I discover on the piano. It just comes to me. My songs grow out of emotion.”

An overt lyrical message of moving ahead after loss, the track “I’m Moving On” gives generous space for each band member to contribute solos that grapple with the notion of moving forward, making the track a more gentle and evocative standout off the record. With Bernstein and Fortner at the instrumental helm, Niemack’s gifted scatting is guided effortlessly throughout “I’ll Love Again” and “Right Here, Right Now” are two examples, where lush instrumentation is met by silken vocal intonations.

While recording at the Van Gelder, Alexander joined the band as a special guest alto saxophonist. He contributes his optimistic original composition “Let Life Lead You.” Though the cheerful message was originally penned ‘Little Lucas,’ a note to Alexander’s son, Niemack was galvanized by its universality. Contributing a new lyric and title, she sings about embracing risk and remaining grateful in moments of opportunity a key sentiment that prevails across the record.

Highlighting her propensity for articulation and translucence as a songwriter and vocalist, Niemack outrivals herself on What’s Love. A deliberate and tasteful meditation on life's various chapters, What’s Love captures the essence of a talent with an unrequited passion for the sounds of storytelling. Judy Niemack, through her confident command and glistening vocal range, is inviting us to think about what ‘love’ means, yet by her own seamless and magical invention, once we accept her call, all we really have to do is listen.

Personnel: Judy Niemack - vocals; Peter Bernstein - guitar; Sullivan Fortner - piano; Doug Weiss - bass; Joe Farnsworth - drums; Eric Alexander - alto saxophone (9)

What's Love?

Thursday, November 10, 2022

John Daversa - All Without Words: Variations Inspired by Loren

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:14
Size: 168,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:08) 1. Loren's Theme
(4:47) 2. Searching but Never Finding
(6:30) 3. Two Steps Forward
(7:38) 4. Seeing It Again for the First Time
(5:08) 5. The Urgency of Every Moment
(6:46) 6. Invisible Things
(5:50) 7. Walking in Our Own Footsteps - The Circle Game
(8:02) 8. The Smallest Thing
(6:16) 9. A Day Is Forever - Like Any Other
(4:58) 10. Three Roads Diverged
(6:06) 11. Learning Simply to Be
(7:01) 12. It’s Enough to Be Here, Now

Music can be inspired by many things, such as romantic affection, personal experience, world events and social concerns among many others. This extraordinary piece of music was inspired by a parent's love for a child.

Trumpeter John Daversa asked his friend, composer Justin Morell, to write a large-scale orchestral piece for him. Morell came up with a composition based on his life with his son, Loren, who is autistic. Loren struggled with verbal communication from a very young age and completely lost the ability to speak by the time he was three. Nevertheless, Morell has constantly strived to connect and communicate with his son who was sixteen at the time this was recorded. The ongoing cycle of joys and sorrows in this struggle and the bond of undying love that powers it is all reflected in this music.

The work is a twelve movement trumpet concerto featuring Daversa backed by a full orchestra of jazz and classical musicians plus a choir, The main musical theme is a simple rising and falling melody Daversa plays at the beginning, based on Loren's own wordless singing, which is then put through eleven variations. The leader is the main soloist, working through a myriad of settings with classical and jazz elements. "The Urgency of Every Moment" has a brisk, cascading motif played by the string section that could be an orchestral cityscape written by Leonard Bernstein or Aaron Copland. "Seeing It Again for the First Time" moves along on a creeping jazz pulse led by Tal Cohen's piano and Justin Morell's own guitar playing. In both settings, and throughout the CD, Daversa's trumpet is a bright, glowing presence. He shines whether he is pushing out quietly childlike melodies over sweeping orchestral movement or vaulting gracefully and soulfully over a tense string theme.

The obvious comparisons for this work are the joyful humanity of Maria Schneider's music and the legendary collaborations of Miles Davis and Gil Evans. Davis and Evans never got to work on a scale this grand, but when Daversa blows eloquently over a rising curtain of piano, strings and voices on "Invisible Things" or plays muted over a slow pulse then switches to majestic open horn as the orchestra gets louder on "A Day Is Forever," the lineage is clear.

Some of the titles of the movements such as "A Day Is Forever," "The Urgency of Every Moment," and "Learning Simply To Be" convey the idea of taking joy from the present moment and approaching life with patience and compassion. The quiet, unceasing beat that consistently underlines the music brings home the fact that this composition is about an ongoing process of communication and discovery. The potent feelings expressed throughout are summed up in the final movement, "It's Enough To Be Here, Now" where Daversa's poignant whispers over the rhythm section's soft pulse seem to be suffused with quiet determination and love.

This music would sound wonderful even without its context. Knowing where it came from makes it infinitely more more powerful. John Daversa's trumpet playing is masterful throughout, giving the element of mercurial, unceasing life to the compassionate vistas Justin Morell composes. For beauty and heart, this music is above and beyond anything else around today. It is an outstanding recording.By Jerome Wilson https://www.allaboutjazz.com/all-without-words-variations-inspired-by-loren-john-daversa-jazz-orchestra-tiger-turn

Personnel: John Daversa: trumpet; Justin Morell: guitar; Tai Cohen: piano; Dion Kerr: bass; David Chiverton: drums.

Additional Instrumentation: Scott Flavin, orchestra conductor; Amanda Quist, choir conductor; Abby Young, concertmaster. Conrad Fok: Piano; Lev Garfein: Violin; Strings: Violin I: Abby Young; Sheena Gutierrez; Karen Lord-Powell; Steffen Zeichner; Ashley Liberty; Gregory Carreno; Violin II: Svetlana Salminen; Yuhao Zhou; Orlando Forte; Katarina Nazarova; Julia Jakkel; Viola: Matt Nabours; Vishnu Ramankutty; Ross DeBardelaben; Cello: Brent Charran; Shea Kole; Tadao Ito; Bass: Brian Powell; Ethan Olaguibel; Winds: Jennifer Grim: flute; Alyssa Mena: flute, alto flute; Troy Roberts: soprano and tenor saxophone; Melvin Butler: soprano and tenor saxophone; Matt Clarke: clarinet; Frankie Capoferri: clarinet, bass clarinet; Gabriel Beavers: bassoon; Melanie Villarreal: bassoon; Richard Todd: horn; Stan Spinola: horn; Antoni Olesik: timpani, vibraphone, glockenspiel, marimba; Choir: Emily Finke: soprano; Safia Zaman: soprano; Alexandra Colaizzi: alto; Kate Reid: alto; Sidney O’Gorman: tenor; Noah Zaidspiner: tenor; Thandolwethu Mamba: bass; Dylan Melville: bass.

All Without Words: Variations Inspired by Loren

Herbie Nichols Project - Strange City

Styles: Bop, Piano Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:53
Size: 124,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:49)  1. Moments Magical
(5:21)  2. Enrapture
(7:29)  3. Delights
(4:43)  4. Blue Shout
(4:38)  5. Strange City
(5:11)  6. Karna Kangi
(3:36)  7. The Happenings
(5:23)  8. Change Of Season
(6:39)  9. Some Wandering Bushmen
(5:00) 10. Shuffle Montgomery

Since 1992, the Herbie Nichols Project has been dedicated to performing the music of a gentleman who in his lifetime was sadly neglected but who left behind a body of work just as idiosyncratic and distinctive as that of Thelonious Monk. Following their two previous releases, Dr. Cyclop’s Dream and Love Is Proximity, the group now makes their debut on the Palmetto label with Strange City, a program made up almost exclusively by tunes that Nichols never recorded himself. Arguably, this set contains some of the ensemble’s finest moments on record to date. There’s much to discover here and the variegated program moves from the almost classical sounding “Moments Magical” that opens the disc to the quintessential “Shuffle Montgomery” that acts as a closer. Along the way there are ample opportunities not only to luxuriate in the compositional genius of Nichols, but also to admire the strong ensemble passages and the individual voices that make up the ensemble. Trumpeter Ron Horton is darkly lyrical on the title track, drummer Matt Wilson is intensely musical during his solo spot on “Blue Shout,” and pianist Frank Kimbrough taps the Nichols genius in a splendid trio take on “Karna Kangi.” These are just three highlights among a great program that not only interprets and extends the Nichols legacy but also speaks highly in regards to each group member’s individual muse. ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/strange-city-herbie-nichols-palmetto-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php
 
Personnel: Frank Kimbrough (piano), Ben Allison (bass), Ron Horton (trumpet & flugelhorn), Ted Nash (tenor saxophone), Michael Blake (soprano saxophone), Wycliffe Gordon (trombone), Matt Wilson (drums)

Strange City

Andy Bey - Ain't Necessarily So

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 66:42
Size: 152.7 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[0:29] 1. Intro
[7:00] 2. Ain't Necessarily So
[9:24] 3. Hey, Love
[5:22] 4. All The Things You Are
[9:08] 5. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
[9:02] 6. If I Should Lose You
[9:20] 7. On Second Thought
[8:37] 8. Brother, Can You Spare A Dime
[8:15] 9. Someone To Watch Over Me

Singer Andy Bey is less well known as a pianist, but nowadays he leads his trio from the piano stool, his instrumental wanderlust having an equal capacity to his voice for taking a saunter down the less familiar alleyways. This live album was recorded a decade back at Birdland, in what was effectively Bey's first significant New York residency as a leader. He's joined by bassist Peter Washington and drummer Kenny Washington on most of the numbers, with sticksman Vito Lesczak sitting in on two tracks.

Bey's set is standard-based, unlike his more out-there work in the 1970s, but in a cunningly subversive way, he manages to tinker with even the most familiar material, literally unstitching it until it slides down from the bandstand, where it will then wrap its tender tendrils around both the audience or the armchair listener. Choices that include "All The Things You Are," "Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? and the title track don't end up sounding tiresomely routine, but take on a freshness that is now increasingly difficult to maintain.

Bey is blessed with a commanding voice that can easily swoop from a falsetto down to a vibrato-ed thundering, taking his phrasing from gospel, blues and soul, then projecting it as if from a theatrical stage, or even a pulpit. The piano is used as an extension of this technique, underlining, answering or repeating his vocal lines. This produces the unnerving effect of a combined sense of conservative old-fashioned-ness and a bold tearing up of the sacrosanct songbook. There aren't too many parallels to point out. Maybe Mark Murphy, because of his shared sense of time-displacement and his instinctive coolness.

Bey threw an album release party at New York's Blue Note in December, 2007, and his set list still remained very similar. Could this be because he hasn't changed much in a decade, or is he merely attempting to reflect the album's contents? Even some of the between-song banter remained almost exactly the same. His braids are now longer, bunched behind a pirate scarf, Bey draped in a slick suit. His rhythm team has changed—Joe Martin on bass and Lesczak handling the sticks throughout. These two were in tune with Bey's sensitivity, as he scanned these familiar songs from his little notebook or launched off into an involved instrumental that revealed his similarly winding way on the piano keys. If anything, the personal live experience seemed even more conceptual, as Bey exuded the aura of an almost totally unpredictable, abstract artist, yet from within a traditional jazz milieu. ~Martin Longley

Andy Bey: vocals, piano; Peter Washington: bass; Kenny Washington, Vito Lesczak: drums.

Ain't Necessarily So

Yola Nash - Manhattan Whispers

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:00
Size: 94,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:56) 1. Manhattan whispers
(4:01) 2. Lovers in Paris
(4:20) 3. Still love you
(3:38) 4. World on fire
(5:18) 5. Pray for love
(5:04) 6. Angel’s tears
(4:59) 7. So in love
(4:46) 8. Truth tango
(4:55) 9. Wonderful life

A unique jazz singer-songwriter, Yola Nash’s new album MANHATTAN WHISPERS is out. Yola's smooth jazz style is stamped with her signature seductive sound, and her exotic delivery is lushly flavored with Eastern European folk, Parisian avant-garde texture of accordion harmonics and brilliantly anchored in the Latin grooves. Blending and blurring the lines between Jazz, Pop, Latin and Eastern European colors Yola Nash is expertly crafting a personal musical style that is irresistible! It’s the Polish-born jazz singer-songwriter’s third studio album, as a leader.

She co-produced the project with Grammy-winning musicians and producers Edsel Gomez (Dee Dee Bridgewater) and Lonnie Park (Steward Copeland). On her infectious Manhattan Whispers, her brilliant band tailored colorful groovy musical soundscapes around the award-winning jazz chanteuse’s passionate vocals. The album presents all original songs written by Yola and her long time music collaborators. Her evocative lyrics talk about life, love, current events in the world and her sensual direct delivery has taken her project to a unique dimension creating an intriguingly fresh new cross-over sound. She has come a long way to NYC, faced and triumphed over adversity, and lived to sing about it and inspire others to flourish in life. "Manhattan Whispers is a celebration of the mind and the heart." https://www.allaboutjazz.com/album/manhattan-whispers-yola-nash

Yola was assisted musically, by Fella Cederbaum (poet composer, spoken word), Edsel Gomez (musical director, pianist, arranger keyboard player), Alex Meixner (accordionist, composer), Graham Keir (guitarist, composer), Luisito Quintero (percussionist, drummer), Dave Baron (bassist), Octavio Vazquez, Ryan C.

Manhattan Whispers

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Various - Capitol Sings Johnny Mercer

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:03
Size: 162.7 MB
Styles: Vocal, Easy Listening
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[3:17] 1. Ella Mae Morse - Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
[3:11] 2. Martha Tilton - And The Angels Sing
[2:49] 3. Gordon MacRae - Autumn Leaves
[3:12] 4. Jo Stafford - Blues In The Night
[1:53] 5. Blossom Dearie - Charade
[3:40] 6. Judy Garland - Come Rain Or Come Shine
[2:22] 7. Nat King Cole - Day In-Day Out
[3:16] 8. Matt Monro - Days Of Wine And Roses
[2:47] 9. The Pied Pipers - Dream
[2:32] 10. Benny Goodman - Goody Goody
[2:52] 11. Johnny Mercer - Glow Worm
[2:55] 12. The Four Freshmen - I Thought About You
[2:49] 13. Dinah Shore - I'm Old Fashioned
[2:57] 14. Dean Martin - In The Cool Cool Cool Of The Evening
[2:16] 15. Stan Kenton & His Orchestra - Jeepers Creepers
[2:22] 16. Vic Damone - Laura
[3:26] 17. Lena Horne - Moon River
[3:03] 18. Johnny Mercer - On The Atchison, Topeka & The Sante Fe
[4:13] 19. Harold Arlen - One For My Baby (And One More For The Road)
[2:58] 20. Kay Starr - P.S. I Love You
[2:21] 21. Nancy Wilson - Satin Doll
[4:00] 22. Hoagy Carmichael - Skylark
[2:54] 23. Keely Smith - That Old Black Magic
[2:47] 24. Andy Russell - Too Marvelous For Words

Singer/songwriter Johnny Mercer was one of the founders of Capitol Records in the early '40s, so it's appropriate that he rates his own volume in the label's various-artists songbook compilation series of the 1990s (one that has already had discs devoted to Cole Porter and George Gershwin). As a lyricist working over a long career, Mercer provides a varied range of material for inclusion. This is a man who was setting words to 1930s swing hits like "And the Angels Sing," "Goody Goody," and "Satin Doll," and was still going strong in the 1960s, when he was writing movie themes like "Moon River" and "The Days of Wine and Roses" with Henry Mancini. In between, there were standards of the ‘40s such as "Blues in the Night" and "That Old Black Magic," and ‘50s favorites like "Autumn Leaves" and "In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening." Capitol was devoted to singers, which allowed it to take advantage of the post-swing era of the late ‘40s and ‘50s when singers ruled. Tops among them was Frank Sinatra, a Capitol artist, who apparently didn't allow his recordings to be compiled on this sort of collection. But many other important singers are included, among them Judy Garland, Nat King Cole, Dinah Shore, and Dean Martin. And Mercer himself pops in several times, as do a couple of his composer collaborators, Harold Arlen and Hoagy Carmichael. Although Mercer has an identifiable writing style, full of a self-invented Southern slang ("swingeroonie!," "my huckleberry friend"), his teaming with different sorts of composers allows for many different musical styles on this disc, making it one of the rangier volumes in the series. ~William Ruhlmann

Capitol Sings Johnny Mercer

Marion Brown - Porto Novo

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:18
Size: 129,2 MB
Art: Front

( 6:25) 1. Similar Limits
( 6:08) 2. Sound Structure
( 5:49) 3. Improvisation
( 6:33) 4. Qbic
(11:53) 5. Porto Novo
(16:10) 6. And Then They Danced
( 3:17) 7. Rhythmus No. 1

This was one of altoist Marion Brown's best recordings. Although a very adventurous improviser, Brown usually brought lyricism and a thoughtful (if unpredictable) approach to his music. Accompanied by bassist Maarten van Regteben Altena and drummer Han Bennink for this stimulating session (recorded in Holland), Brown stretches out on five of his compositions and is heard at the peak of his creative powers.By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/porto-novo-mr0000357302

Porto Novo